82R4524 BPG-F
 
  By: Hancock H.C.R. No. 66
 
 
 
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
         WHEREAS, The business climate in Texas has been consistently
  ranked as the best in the United States, and the state's economy
  regularly outpaces the rest of the nation; and
         WHEREAS, Texas produces approximately 60 percent of all
  chemicals manufactured in the United States, as well as 30 percent
  of the nation's natural gas and 20 percent of its oil; in addition,
  the state leads the nation in overall electricity production, and
  its competitive wholesale power market is among the most robust and
  demand-responsive in the country; and
         WHEREAS, The manufacturing sector contributes $96 billion
  annually to the Texas economy and employs more than one million
  Texans at some of the highest salaries in the state; the continued
  economic health of the state is dependent on this vital sector, and
  Texas is competing globally to protect existing business investment
  and attract new jobs; and
         WHEREAS, Texas has not been immune to the global economic
  recession; over the past two years, some manufacturers have shut
  down and there have been significant job losses; yet in spite of
  this challenging business climate, the Environmental Protection
  Agency has moved forward with the regulation of greenhouse gas
  emissions from stationary sources such as refineries, chemical
  plants, power plants, and other commercial establishments; and
         WHEREAS, The EPA claims that greenhouse gas emissions are air
  pollutants under Section 202(a) of the Clean Air Act, but that act
  was designed to regulate conventional pollutants, such as ozone and
  particulate matter, that create local air quality problems, and not
  unconventional pollutants, such as greenhouse gases, which are
  found in essentially equal concentrations around the globe; in
  formulating its plan to regulate greenhouse gases, the EPA failed
  to identify cost-effective technology to meet the demands of such
  regulation and instead invoked the legal doctrine of "absurd
  results," essentially admitting that implementing the new rules
  would overwhelm the administrative capabilities of state
  permitting authorities and the agency itself; and
         WHEREAS, Congress and the scientific community continue to
  engage in vigorous, legitimate, and substantive debate regarding
  the regulation of greenhouse gases; meanwhile, the EPA has acted on
  its own to institute a backdoor regulatory regime, an abuse of power
  with serious implications; these regulations are projected to cost
  Texas more than 300,000 jobs because of increased energy prices,
  compliance with required greenhouse gas permit conditions, and
  greater competition from overseas manufacturers that have lower
  energy costs; furthermore, as it has communicated to the EPA, the
  State of Texas does not have the legal authority to regulate
  greenhouse gas emissions from stationary sources in the manner
  proposed by the EPA; and
         WHEREAS, The EPA's regulation of greenhouse gas emissions
  from stationary sources will prove highly detrimental to the
  manufacturing and energy sectors in an already struggling economy
  and will cause additional job losses that the nation can ill afford;
  now, therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 82nd Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby respectfully urge the Congress of the United States to take
  such actions as are necessary to prevent the Environmental
  Protection Agency from regulating greenhouse gas emissions from
  stationary sources; and, be it further
         RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official
  copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to
  the EPA administrator, to the president of the Senate and speaker of
  the House of Representatives of the United States Congress, and to
  all the members of the Texas delegation to Congress with the request
  that this resolution be entered in the Congressional Record as a
  memorial to the Congress of the United States of America.